Chromatophores isolated from the purple sulfur bacterium Chromatium and the green sulfur bacterium Chlorobium exhibit absorbance changes in the cytochrome -band region consistent with the presence of a b-type cytochrome. Cytochrome content determined by reduced minus oxidized difference spectra and by heme analysis suggests that each bacterium contains one cytochrome b per molecule of photochemically active bacteriochlorophyll (reaction-center bacteriochlorophyll).The b-type cytochrome in Chromatium has an -band maximum at 560 nm and a midpoint oxidation-reduction potential of −5 mV at pH 8.0. The b-type cytochrome in Chlorobium has an -band maximum at 564 nm and an apparent midpoint oxidation-reduction potential near −90 mV. Chromatophores isolated from both Chromatium and Chlorobium cells catalyze a photoreduction of cytochrome b that is enhanced in the presence of antimycin A. Antimycin A and 2-n-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide inhibit endogenous (but not phenazine methosulfate-mediated) cyclic photophosphorylation in Chromatium chromatophores and non-cyclic electron flow from Na2S to NADP in Chlorobium chromatophores. These observations suggest that b-type cytochromes may function in electron transport reactions in photosynthetic sulfur bacteria. |